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Environmental ethics 

is the philosophical discipline that considers the moral and ethical relationship
of human beings to the environment. In other words: what, if any, moral obligation does man have to
the preservation and care of the non-human world?
While ethical issues concerning the environment have been debated for centuries, environmental
ethics did not emerge as a philosophical discipline until the 1970s. Its emergence was the result of
increased awareness of how the rapidly growing world population was impacting the environment as
well as the environmental consequences that came with the growing use of pesticides, technology,
and industry.
Environmental ethics helps define man's moral and ethical obligations toward the environment.
But human values become a factor when looking at environmental ethics. Human values are the
things that are important to individuals that they then use to evaluate actions or events. In other
words, humans assign value to certain things and then use this assigned value to make decisions
about whether something is right or wrong. Human values are unique to each individual because not
everyone places the same importance on each element of life. For example, a person living in poverty
in an undeveloped country may find it morally acceptable to cut down the forest to make room for a
farm where he can grow food for his family. However, a person in a developed country may find this
action morally unacceptable because the destruction of forests increases carbon dioxide emissions
into the atmosphere, which can negatively impact the environment.
Environmental ethics, along with human values, make for challenging philosophical debates about
man's interaction with the environment. Water and air pollution, the depletion of natural resources,
loss of biodiversity, destruction of ecosystems, and global climate change are all part of the
environmental ethics debate. And we see that within the discipline of environmental ethics there are
tough ethical decisions humans must consider.
For example: is it acceptable for poor farmers in undeveloped countries to cut down forest to make
room for farmland, even if this action harms the environment? Is it morally wrong for humans to
continue to burn fossil fuels knowing that this action leads to air pollution and global climate changes?
Is it ethically permissible for man to build a hydroelectric dam knowing that this will disrupt the
migration pattern of certain fish, leading to their extinction? Does a mining company have a moral
obligation to restore the natural environment destroyed by their mining techniques?

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